I recently acquired this Weeden 34, notably it had been in the same family since new, and they were able to tell me with certainly that it dates from either 1926 or 27. It seemed to be in overall complete and good condition for its age, with exception of the steam pipe having an old solder repair, and the sight glass missing.
I wanted to take it apart to do a complete cleaning and re-furbish, which required removing that old solder repair. I assumed that the entire pipe (elbow joint) was brass, but when I heated it, much of it just melted away, leaving only the part that is attached to the boiler (that portion did not melt)! So, I can only assume that the "repair" involved the solder forming most of the elbow pipe (?). Unless that part of the pipe was made out of some type of metal that would always melt (which does not make much sense, if it was repaired with solder).
At this point, what I need to know is if the remaining part attached to the boiler is screwed in with threads? I assume that it must be, just like the sight glass mounts, but have not tried to remove it yet. My plan was to try heating it while unscrewing it.
Also, I don't know if there are any easy sources for a replacement of that elbow pipe (original or not)? I doubt that I can still use what is left there, even if it is threaded and I can get it out. Any help appreciated - Thanks!
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